Engineering:Viking-class submarine

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K9D Viking Class submarine (model).jpg
A model of a K9D Viking-class submarine
Class overview
Name: Viking class
Builders: Viking Submarine Corporation
Operators:
Succeeded by: A26 submarine
Planned: 10
Cancelled: 10
General characteristics
Type: Submarine
Displacement: 1,100–1,700 t (1,083–1,673 long tons)
Length: 52–60 m (170 ft 7 in–196 ft 10 in)
Beam: 6.7 m (22 ft 0 in)
Propulsion: Stirling Air-independent propulsion (AIP)
Speed:
  • 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph) surfaced
  • 23 knots (43 km/h; 26 mph) submerged
Endurance: Can stay submerged up to 100% of mission time
Complement: 22–28
Sensors and
processing systems:
DMUX20 / TSM2233 Mk3[1]
Armament:
  • Multi-purpose homing torpedoes
  • Cruise missiles
  • ASW torpedoes
  • Mines and countermeasures

The Viking-class submarine was a planned class of submarines to be built by the Viking Submarine Corporation. Viking was a corporation jointly established by Kockums in Sweden, Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace in Norway and Odense Steel Shipyard in Denmark . Finland was an observer of the Viking project, as an eventual future buyer of additional Viking submarines. The idea was to develop modern successor to the Swedish Gotland class, that would have cost about one third of the German Type 214.[2] It was initially planned that the Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian navies would purchase two, four, and four Viking-class submarines each starting in 2005.

When the Royal Danish Navy announced that they would stop using submarines completely in the summer of 2004,[citation needed] the whole Viking project was cancelled. Currently Kockums is doing low-intensive continuous research, based on the Viking design, towards the A26 submarine for Sweden.

In 2015 Damen Group and Saab Group announced that they have teamed up to jointly develop, offer and build next-generation submarines that are able to replace the current Walrus-class submarines of the Royal Netherlands Navy.[3] It is speculated that the design will be derived from the A26 submarine.[4]

References

External links